The Free Press
Shop Our Limited Edition America at 250 Hats!
ForumNewslettersSign InSubscribe
Things Worth Remembering: America Is an Invention
The Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way mural in the U.S. Capitol. (Emanuel Leutze)
For centuries, poets, musicians, and painters have crossed the Atlantic with dreams of a New World. George Berkeley was one of them. And so was I.
By Dominic Green
03.23.25 — Things Worth Remembering
--:--
--:--
Upgrade to Listen
Produced by ElevenLabs using AI narration
382
438
READ IN APP

Welcome to Things Worth Remembering, in which writers recall wisdom from the past that we should commit to heart. In today’s edition, Dominic Green tells the story of a mural that was painted in the U.S. Capitol during the American Civil War—and of the poem it was based on.

It was the first major clash of the American Civil War. In the rolling hills of northern Virginia, some 60,000 soldiers gathered to fight the First Battle of Bull Run. Nearly 5,000 of them would become casualties. Up and down the country, a divided society realized that a long and bloody conflict lay ahead.

The month was July, the year 1861. Thirty miles to the east, in Washington, D.C., a middle-aged German artist climbed a ladder in the Capitol Building—and started painting a mural.

Continue Reading The Free Press
To support our journalism, and unlock all of our investigative stories and provocative commentary about the world as it actually is, subscribe below.
Annual
$8.33/month
Billed as $100 yearly
Save $20!
Monthly
$10/month
Billed as $10 monthly
Already have an account?
Sign In
To read this article, sign in or subscribe
Dominic Green
Dominic Green is a Wall Street Journal contributor, a Washington Examiner columnist, and the author of five books.
Tags:
Art
History
Comments
Comments are closed. The conversation isn’t. Keep it going in The Free Press Forum.
Join the conversation
Share your thoughts and connect with other readers by becoming a paid subscriber!
Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

No posts

For Free People.
LatestSearchAboutCareersForumShopPodcastsVideoEvents
Download the app
Download on the Google Play Store
©2026 The Free Press. All Rights Reserved.Powered by Substack.
Privacy∙Terms∙Collection notice